Albany wins First Four game to advance in NCAA

Wednesday

Mar 19, 2014 at 12:01 AM

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) — D.J. Evans scored 22 points, including two clinching free throws with 12.6 seconds left, to lead Albany to its first NCAA tournament victory, 71-64 over Mount St. Mary's on Tuesday night in the First Four.

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) — D.J. Evans scored 22 points, including two clinching free throws with 12.6 seconds left, to lead Albany to its first NCAA tournament victory, 71-64 over Mount St. Mary's on Tuesday night in the First Four.

The Great Danes (19-14) advance to meet overall No. 1 seed and top-ranked Florida on Thursday in Orlando.

It was a wild game of incredible turnarounds, with the Great Danes bolting to leads of 13-0 and 21-2, only to have The Mount (16-17) bounce back with a 21-2 run of its own to pull even.

Peter Hooley had 20 points and Gary Johnson 13 for Albany, winless in its three previous NCAA trips.

Hooley, one of three Australians on the Albany roster, hit two free throws with 2:43 remaining to stretch the lead to 65-62. After Julian Norfleet countered with a bucket, Hooley again pounded his way to the basket and lofted a shot over a defender for a 67-64 lead at the 2-minute mark.

It stayed that way with the teams missing big shots. Rashad Whack and Norfleet each missed potential tying 3s before Evans was fouled with 12.6 seconds left and hit both shots to increase the lead to five points.

Norfleet then missed another 3 and Albany finally could call itself an NCAA winner.

Will Miller led The Mount with 21, all on 3s. He didn't get a shot off in the last 3:32.

Whack added 16 points and Sam Prescott 14 for The Mount, which electrified the crowd at the University of Dayton with 3-point fireworks. The Mountaineers hit 12 of 37 shots behind the arc to time and again come back from deficits.

The glut of 3-pointers was nothing new for the Mountaineers. They came in with an offense heavily dependent on shots behind the arc. They averaged 9 of 25 on 3-pointers coming in.

Albany had made some racket in the NCAAs before, but had never come out on top. In 2006, the Great Danes led by double figures in the second half but lost to Connecticut, 72-59. A year later, they held their own before falling Virginia, 84-57.

A year ago, as a 15 seed, they battled Duke throughout before coming up short, 73-61.

Albany led 35-31 at the break, but that didn't tell the story of one bizarre half.

The Mount couldn't do much right for the first 8-plus minutes. The Great Danes raced to a 13-0 lead. The Mountaineers missed misfired on their first 11 shots from the field, including six behind the arc.

Even after Whack finally got them on the board with a driving layup at the 13:17 mark, the Great Danes kept pouring it on. When Hooley cut through the lane for a layup at the 11:33 mark, Albany led 21-2 and the Mount St. Mary's white-clad cheering section was silent.

Just that quickly, things turned around.

A team fueled by 3s finally went on a surge after Miller hit the first of his three first-half 3s. That touched off an 18-0 run, with Miller leading the way with three long bombs and Norfleet adding one.

After trading such huge swings of momentum, now the teams traded baskets.

From a tie at 31, the Great Danes closed the half with Hooley scoring off a long pass from Evans after a steal. Then in the final seconds, Evans hit a baseline jumper for the four-point lead.

Mount St. Mary's was also making its fourth NCAA appearance, although it had won once before — a victory over Coppin State in 2008 in the old format of an opening-round leading into the big tournament.

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Follow Rusty Miller on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/RustyMillerAP

AP-WF-03-19-14 0107GMT

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